"The permanent collection . . . spans American and European art of the 19th and 20th
centuries." The 145 acres of the former Frick Estate constitute one of the largest
publicly accessible sculpture gardens on the East Coast.

"Every year the Cleveland Institute of Art builds on an internationally recognized heritage of
excellence and innovation that dates back to 1882. That year the school was chartered as the Western
Reserve School of Design for Women. "

"The new MOCA Cleveland, the first building designed in the United States by Farshid Moussavi
Architecture (FMA), serves as a catalyst for creativity and growth in a cosmopolitan Cleveland neighborhood,
which is home to one of the country’s largest concentrations of cultural and educational institutions."

Museum der Moderne - IMHO the most
interesting of the bunch but that's only because I have a penchant for Nolde, Kokoschka, et al.
Unfortunately not a lot of images on the website - at least that I could find.

Salzburger Kunstverein - founded in 1844 & "one of the first Austrian associations to
focus on the sale and exhibition of contemporary art"
(NY
Times)

Jugengstil house designed and built for Victor Horta by
J .M. Olbrich,
the same architect who designed the
Sezession House in Vienna. Apparently it remains closed due to a dipute among Horta's heirs. Many more
pictures of the interior available here.

Norwich. Housed in the Sainsbury Centre for
Visual Arts. "[R]epresents the French exponents of art nouveau associated with the
Ecole de Nancy and makers who, both in France and Britain, worked across a range of disciplines
such as glassware and furniture, metalware and jewellery." Here
are some more pictures from the BBC.

Frederic, Lord Leighton's home, is one of the London’s most remarkable 19th-century houses
and a consummate summation of the period’s Orientalist taste, featuring Leighton's collection of
more than 1,000 Islamic tiles, Located on the edge of Holland Park in Kensington.

"[T]he last authentic Arts and Crafts interior in Britain. [T]he decoration and furnishings preserved as they were in the lifetime of the printer Emery Walker (1851-1933), a great friend and mentor to William Morris."

Vence. Gorgeous windows designed by Matisse. And a beautiful painting on the interior lid of a Dodd harpsichord
(at least when I was there during the last century) that goes unmentioned
in this Wikipedia article.

W-s-M was the village where René Lalique chose to build his factory in the aftermath of
the First World War. Situated in the heart of the Northern Vosges, a region with a long-standing
glassmaking tradition, it is now the only place in the world where the brand's crystalware is produced.

a rather boring page with just hours' info, address, etc. A collection of
Dutch "masterpieces from the Dutch "Golden-Age",
including excellent paintings by Vermeer (two when I was there), Rembrandt,
Steen and Frans Hals."

The most important collection of the 19th century Hague School & French Barbizon works in
the world.

Hals Frans Museum - Groot Heiligland. "Frans Hals, the most famous Haarlem painter of the Golden Age." The museum hosts "the largest collection of paintings by Frans Hals in the world" as well as works by other artists of the period.

Kröller-Müller museum
- a most amazing collection outside Amsterdam in Otterlo, NL. It has roomsful of Van Goghs,
a vast collection of other artists, and is surrounded by an incredible sculpture garden and
acres and acres of park.

The Scheringa Museum of Realist
Art - Spanbroek (near Hoorn if that means anything to you. Interesting "Magic Realism" collection including
some Magritte & de Chirico. Closed in 2009. Part of its collection is now in the
MORE museum in Gorssel.

Textiel Museum - Tilburg Great collection including examples
from the Amsterdam School.

Glasgow. "[H]ome to the world’s largest permanent display of the work of James McNeill Whistler,
the largest single holding of the work of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and The Mackintosh House, the
reassembled interiors from his Glasgow home."

Ljubljana - "Moderna galerija houses the national collection of 20th century Slovene art (paintings,
sculptures, prints and drawings as well as photography, video and electronic media collections) and a collection
of works from the former Yugoslavia. The national collection presents the basic stages in the development of the
Slovene tradition of modern and contemporary art from the beginning of the 20th century onwards."